Honestly I’m not much of an artist; I haven’t sat down and decided to make a drawing for years but I always doodle. If there’s a paper in front of me I will just naturally draw on it. Sometimes it’s a casual cartoony character and other times it’s just shapes that I turn into other things. Often because I don’t think about what I’m doing I end up with these bizarre but kinda cool pieces!

My definition of doodling is way different then this. I’m slightly confused on why we have how to doodle courses...A doodle is more of a zoned out phase, where you don’t really pay attention to what you’re drawling and you get random things out of it.Seems like taking lessons on how to doodle would defeat the purpose of doodling. Now learning the abstracts and demential things is cool, I just don’t personal consider it doodling unless you’re not trying to draw anything in particular and end up with it.Still an interesting video(And yes I heard and watched the whole video. This is just my thoughts on doodles)

I personally think that a doodle is something that follows no structure and basically involves taking all your thoughts and (in essence) throwing up all those thoughts onto a page. Yes the patterns are useful for extra *finesse* but a basic doodle is a random drawing.

The point of doodling is to have fun with randomness. I once drew a page of doodles off of a picture that I was looking into building house (house designs). Starting with a silorette of a car as a marker where the garage door would be I turned it into penguin then snowman once I add a scarf the scarf turned into a flower that turned into a hand for Mr Potatoe then I added surprisingly well drawn cats taking parts from Mr Potatoe. That there was a fun doodle, even more that I hardly doodled before myself but that was fun so it courage me to fill the page like I said here. Apparently people take it more seriously and that's weird. Jazza, I also want to point out your wall is a doodle. Doodling is free form.

Doodling is super fun. I never really used to feel comfortable doing it, but then I made the resolution to design a tribalistic tattoo for my 18th birthday. I ended up unintentionally getting into doodling just by creating shapeless masses of interlocking tribalistic motifs to practice and actually found the results to be, in and of themselves, quite satisfying. It helped me develop my own style of geometric tribalism, and I ended up designing a tattoo that looks good and that I'm both proud and content to wear for the rest of my life.The other benefit is that later on, you can start blending doodling with your other styles/mediums as Vexx does, and as I've now started doing: fav.me/dcu26krIn any case, it's really cool that you've started playing around with this medium, and I would love to see how your style of doodling progresses and develops. Best of luck, mate. :)

I’ve never referred to this as doodling I thought just finding new ways attempt shapes and get my creativity to be more confident but if you want a true doodle master go to peter draws page he is amazing

I stumbled upon a channel called Peter Draws, that's all doodling, that inspired me to start REALLY doodling, and I just thought it might be nice to share. Sometimes doodles can look absolutely phenomenal.